General Hospital Psychiatry
Volume 17, Issue 3 , Pages 208-215, May 1995

Jumping from a general hospital

  • R.T. White, M.B., B.S., M.R.C.Psych., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P.

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to: Dr. R. T. White, Clinical Head, Department of Psychiatry, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Missenden Road, Camperdown, 2050 New South Wales, Australia.
  • ,
  • R.J. Gribble, M.B., B.S., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P.
  • ,
  • M.J. Corr, M.B., B.S., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P.
  • ,
  • M.M. Large, B.Sc. (Med), M.B., B.S.

Department of Psychiatry, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract 

Jumping is the most common reported means of suicide in general hospitals. There have been no published reviews of suicides of nonpsychiatric inpatients since 1980. We describe 12 subjects who, between January 1980 and January 1992, jumped from a large general teaching hospital. Eight of them succumbed, providing a rate of suicide of 1.7 per 100,000 admissions. There were three clinical subgroups: those admitted after suicide attempts, the acutely delirious, and the chronically medically ill. Factors appearing frequently in the third subgroup were pain, dyspnea, transient confusion, poor prognosis, and recent adverse news. When we compared the hospital jumpers with 30 nonfatal jumpers who attended our Emergency Department, the medical and psychiatric profiles differed in the frequency of medical illnesses, advancing age, male gender, and absence of preexisting psychiatric illness. Proximity and ease of access to balconies and windows appeared to be highly relevant to the prevention of hospital jumping.

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PII: 0163-8343(94)00092-R

General Hospital Psychiatry
Volume 17, Issue 3 , Pages 208-215, May 1995